by Sherwood Ross
July 20, 2011
from
GlobalResearch Website
Sherwood Ross is a
Miami-based public relations consultant who operates the
Anti-War News Service. To contribute to his service or
comment reach him at sherwoodross10@gmail.com |
As eavesdroppers go, next to Uncle Sam and John Bull, Rupert
Murdoch, the moral force behind Fox News, is an amateur.
That's because a global eavesdropping scheme being run today by the
United States and Great Britain dwarfs anything that Rupert
Murdoch's editors at The News of The World (TNTW) ever dared
attempt.
British Prime Minister David Cameron may well deny he knew
TNTW was tapping the phones of members of UK's Royal household or
those of American 9/11 victims.
But he can't claim he doesn't know his
country is a partner in
ECHELON, which, according to
Washington journalist Bill Blum, is a,
“network of massive, highly
automated interception stations” that is eavesdropping on the
entire world.
"Like a mammoth vacuum cleaner in
the sky, the National Security Agency (NSA)
sucks it all up: home phone, office phone, cellular phone,
email, fax, telex... satellite transmissions, fiber-optic
communications traffic, microwave links, voice, text images
(that are) captured by satellites continuously orbiting the
earth and then processed by high-powered computers," Blum writes
in his book "Rogue
State".
Calling it the greatest invasion of
privacy ever, Blum says the ceaseless, illegal spy system sucks up
perhaps billions of messages daily, including those of prime
ministers, the Secretary-General of the UN, the pope, embassies,
Amnesty International, Christian Aid, and transnational corporations
and that "if God has a phone, it's being monitored."
Blum also said that during the countdown to its invasion of Iraq in
2003, the U.S. listened in on the conversations of UN
Secretary-General Kofi Annan, the UN weapons inspectors in Iraq,
"and all the members of the UN
Security Council... when they were deliberating about what action
to take in Iraq."
Launched in the 1970s to spy on Soviet
satellite communications,
the NSA and its junior partners in Canada,
Britain, Australia, and New Zealand operate ECHELON, which is a
network of massive, highly automated interception stations covering
the globe at the expense of American taxpayers.
Today, Ed Miliband, leader of the Labour opposition, is
blasting PM Cameron on grounds that,
according to The New York Times
of July 19,
“the recent scandals in
British life were caused by a lack of accountability among those
in high places.” Across Britain, Miliband said, “there is a
yearning for a more decent, responsible, principled country.”
What makes the British public recoil is
the sort of conduct by former TNTW reporter Clive Goodman, who
pleaded guilty in Jan., 2007, to hacking the voice mails of aides to
the royal family.
Pardon me, but,
-
How does that crime begin to
compare with ECHELON, an organ of the U.S. Government,
spying on the Secretary-General of the United Nations or the
Pope?
-
Or stealing, as it has,
confidential business information and passing it along to
favored firms?
I'll say this for Mr. Murdoch:
-
he's closed down his biggest
newspaper
-
he's fired top editors and
reporters for their part in the scandals
-
he's gone before the public and
begged forgiveness
By contrast, what have high U.S.
officials done about the crimes committed via ECHELON? Zip, and they
have no announced plans to do so. They continue to operate ECHELON
unashamedly.
Rupert Murdoch's TNTW was only attempting to do in a small way what
the governments of,
-
the U.S.
-
U.K.
-
Canada
-
Australia
-
New
Zealand,
...(UKUSA) are doing big time every day.
ECHELON is a criminal operation in
violation of international law and terminating it might make
America, too,
“a more decent, responsible,
principled country.”
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